Quality of Life in Caregivers of Patients with Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Sociodemographic, Clinical, and Psychological Factors
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Selection Process, Eligibility Criteria and Data Extraction
2.3. Methodological Quality Appraisal
3. Results
3.1. Search Results
3.2. Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.3. Critical Assessment and Methodological Quality of the Included Articles
3.4. Sociodemographic Factors
3.4.1. Gender
3.4.2. Age
3.4.3. Educational Level
3.4.4. Employment Status
3.4.5. Kinship
3.4.6. Living Situation
3.4.7. Marital Status
3.4.8. Family Income
3.4.9. Physical Health
3.4.10. Time Spent Caregiving
3.4.11. Ethnicity
3.4.12. Patients’ Sociodemographic Factors
3.5. Patient’s Clinical Factors
3.5.1. Duration of Illness
3.5.2. Symptom Severity
3.5.3. Number of Hospitalizations and Comorbidities
3.6. Caregiver’s Psychological Factors
3.6.1. Burden of Care
3.6.2. Coping Strategies
3.6.3. Depression, Anxiety, and Stress
3.6.4. Social and Family Support
3.6.5. Hope and Religious Involvement
3.6.6. Affiliate Stigma and Expressed Emotion
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
PwS | patient(s) with schizophrenia |
QoL | quality of life |
PRISMA | Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses |
PICO | Patient/Population, Intervention/Exposure, Comparison and Outcome |
JBI | Joanna Briggs Institute |
WHOQoL-Bref | World Health Organization Quality of Life scale—abbreviated version |
Schizophrenia Caregiver Quality of Life Questionnaire | S-CGQoL |
SF-36 | Short Form-36 Health Survey |
SF-12 v1 | Short Form-12 Health Survey, version 1 |
SD | standard deviation |
PANSS | Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale |
RCT | Randomized Controlled Trial |
GRADE | Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation |
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Author and Year | Country Study Design n, Mean (SD) Age, % of Female Caregivers Patients’ Setting | QoL Measure | Main Findings | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sociodemographic Factors of Caregivers | Patient’s Sociodemographic and Clinical Factors | Psychological Factors of Caregivers | |||
(Ribé et al., 2018) | Spain Cross-sectional n = 100, 60.1 (11.7), 82% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL (physical and social domains). ♀—⇓ QoL (physical and social domains). ⇑ education—⇑ QoL (social and environmental domains). Employment—⇑ QoL (physical domain). Living with the patient—⇓ QoL (social and environmental domains). | Early-onset schizophrenia in patients—⇓ QoL | ⇑ caregiving burden—⇓ QoL in all domains. Strong social support—⇑ psychological, social, and environmental QoL domains. ⇑ Family APGAR scores—⇑ QoL. |
(Stanley et al., 2017) | India Cross-sectional n = 75, 49.4, 37.5% Inpatients | S-CGQoL | No significant correlation was found between caregiver age and QoL. ♂—⇑ QoL (mean = 93.9) than ♀ (mean = 91.2). ⇓ income—⇓ QoL. | ⇑ severe symptoms—⇓ QoL (p < 0.05). | ⇑ caregiver burden—⇓ QoL across all domains (r = −0.34, p < 0.01). |
(Kate et al., 2014) | India Cross-sectional n = 100, 46 (11.6), 35% Outpatients and inpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | Rural background—⇑ QoL in the social health domain. | Clinical variables of the patients, including symptom severity and illness duration, showed no significant correlations with caregivers’ QoL. | Coping styles: seeking social support—⇓ QoL; collusion—⇓ QoL (physical health, social relationships, and environmental domains); and coercion—⇓ QoL (general health and environmental domains). ⇑ spirituality, religiousness, and personal beliefs—⇑ QoL. |
(Margetić et al., 2013) | Croatia Case–control n = 138, 52.6 (14.4), 63.8% Outpatients | QLESQ-SF | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL (r = −0.464, p = 0.0001). Parents and children of patients—⇓ QoL than siblings (F = 3.567, p = 0.031). Single, divorced, or widowed caregivers—⇓ QoL. | QoL—no correlation with PANSS scores, GAF scores, length of illness, or number of hospitalizations. | n.s. |
(Mizuno et al., 2012) | Japan Cross-sectional n = 34, 63.3 (13.3), 79.4% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇑ psychological and environment QoL scores. Living with patients—⇓ psychological and environmental QoL. | n.s. | ⇑ sense of coherence—⇓ QoL. |
(Quah, 2014) | Singapore Cross-sectional n = 47, no mean age, 55.3% Patients’ setting n.s. | WHOQoL-Bref | n.s. | n.s. | Caregivers providing more than 6 h daily (role overload)—⇓ QoL. ⇑ role distress—⇓ QoL across all domains. |
(Kate et al., 2013b) | India Cross-sectional n = 100, 45.9 (11.6), 35% Outpatients and inpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | n.s. | n.s. | ⇑ caregiver burden, especially in the tension domain—⇓ QoL across all domains. |
(Stanley & Balakrishnan, 2023) | India Cross-sectional n = 75, 46.24, 62.7% Inpatients | The Satisfaction with Life Scale | n.s. | n.s. | Stress had significant direct effects on resilience (effect = 1.39, p < 0.01) and QoL (effect = 0.70, p < 0.001). Resilience mediated the relationship between stress and QoL (effect = 0.09, p < 0.01). Social support did not moderate the relationship between stress and resilience (p > 0.05) but was (+) correlated with resilience and QoL. |
(Khatimah et al., 2022) | Indonesia Cross-sectional n = 106, 43, 85.8% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL (in the physicological and environmental domains). Higher education—⇓ QoL (in the psychological and environmental domains (β = −0.775, p = 0.005)). Employed caregivers—⇑ QoL (in the environmental and psychological domains (β = 1.869, p = 0.008, β = 1.112, p = 0.035)). | General functioning of patients—⇑ QoL. | ⇑ stress—⇓ QoL in all domains: physical health (β = −0.134, p = 0.004); environment (β = −0.134, p = 0.004); and overall QoL (β = −0.224, p = 0.033). Anxiety and depression (−) impacted QoL scores. Environment: depression (β = −0.156, p = 0.005); anxiety (β = −0.149, p = 0.001). Social relationships: depression (β = −0.068, p = 0.012); overall QOL (β = −0.232, p = 0.023; β = −0.335, p = 0.004) |
(Tristiana et al., 2019) | Indonesia Cross-sectional n = 222, 44.05 (9.61), 31.1% Outpatients | S-CGQoL | ♂—⇑ QoL (p = 0.003). Married caregivers—⇑ QoL (p = 0.045). Longer caregiving duration—no significant correlation with QoL. | n.s. | ⇑ caregiving burden—⇓ QoL (r = −0.434, p < 0.001). |
(Francisquini et al., 2020) | Brazil Cross-sectional n = 117, 56.7 (15.7), 74.4% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL, particularly in social relationships (r = −0.401, p < 0.01). | n.s. | ⇑ hope—⇓ QoL in all domains (r = 0.342–0.595, p < 0.05). |
(Caqueo-Urízar et al., 2016b) | Bolivia, Chile, Peru Cross-sectional n = 253, 54.7 (14.4), 67.7% Outpatients | S-CGQoL | n.s. | ⇑ neurocognitive deficits—⇓ QoL (r = −0.32, p < 0.05). | n.s. |
(Caqueo-Urízar et al., 2016a) | Bolivia, Chile, Peru Cross-sectional n = 253, 54.7 (14.4), 67.7% Outpatients | S-CGQoL | ♀—⇓ QoL in the material burden dimension (β = −0.15, p < 0.05). Mothers—⇓ QoL in the psychological and physical well-being and psychological burden and daily life domains. Aymara ethnicity—⇓ QoL scores in the relationships with family (β = −0.17, p < 0.05) and material burden (β = −0.24, p < 0.01) dimensions. ⇑ income—⇑ QoL in the material burden domain (β = 0.25, p < 0.01). | ⇑ severe symptoms—⇓ QoL in psychological and physical well-being (β = −0.29, p < 0.01) and psychological burden and daily life (β = −0.28, p < 0.01). Earlier onset of schizophrenia—⇓ QoL. Unawareness of mental disorder—⇓ QoL (β = −0.23, p < 0.001). ⇑ patients age—⇑ QoL in the material burden dimension (β = 0.19, p < 0.05). | ⇑ subjective burden—⇓ QoL (in psychological and physical well-being). Religious Involvement—not significantly associated with overall QoL, except for a (-) correlation in the psychological and physical well-being domains (β = −0.17, p < 0.05). |
(Khan & Ghourmulla Alghamdi, 2020) | Saudi Arabia Cross-sectional n = 150, 44.7 (13.1), 65.3% Patients’ setting n.s. | S-CGQoL | There is no significant difference between gender means. Higher knowledge about schizophrenia—⇑ QoL (r = 0.236, p < 0.01). The interaction between knowledge and gender significantly affected QoL (three-way interaction R2 change = 3.64%, F = 7.24, p < 0.01). | n.s. | ⇑ caregiving burden—⇓ QoL (r = −0.43, p < 0.01). |
(Geriani, 2015) | India Cross-sectional n = 110, 43.82, 73% Patients’ setting n.s. | WHOQoL-Bref | Caregivers from nuclear families—⇑ environmental QoL compared to those from joint families (p < 0.01). | n.s. | ⇑ burden levels—⇓ QoL in the physical, psychological, social, and environmental domains (p < 0.05). Good coping strategies—⇑ environmental QoL (p = 0.037). |
(Marutani et al., 2020) | Cambodia Cross-sectional n = 59 Outpatients | SF-12 v1 | ♂—⇓ QoL (mental health component). ⇓ household economic status (insufficient to meet basic needs)—⇓ QoL. Employed caregivers—⇑ QoL. Caregivers with chronic physical disease—⇓ QoL (physical component). | The severity of the patient’s illness, the caregiving duration, and DUP—no direct correlation with the caregiver’s QoL. | n.s. |
(Ukpong & Ibigbami, 2021) | Nigeria Cross-sectional n = 100, 56.13 (12.99), 63% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL (in all domains). Married caregivers—⇓ QoL in the psychological health, social relationships, and environmental domains. ⇑ caregiving duration—⇓ QoL (in the physical, psychological, and social domains. | ⇑ illness duration—⇓ QoL (in the physical, psychological, and environmental domains). Employed patient—⇑ caregiver QoL in the physical domain. ⇑ patient’s age—⇓ QoL (physical domain). | ⇑ caregiving burden—⇓ QoL across the psychological, social, and environmental domains. Depressive and anxiety symptoms—⇓ QoL in the psychological, social, and environmental domains. |
(Wang et al., 2023) | China Cross-sectional n = 253, 47.43% Patients’ setting n.s. | WHOQoL-Bref | ♂—⇑ QoL score (mean = 85.14, SD = 11.27) compared to ♀(mean = 82.35, SD = 10.09). | n.s. | ⇑ levels of affiliate stigma—⇓ QoL. ⇑ caregiving burden—⇓ QoL (in all domains). |
(Opoku-Boateng et al., 2017) | Ghana Cross-sectional n = 444, 47, 57% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ♀—⇓ QoL. Caregivers with tertiary education—⇑⇑ QoL. Married caregivers—⇑ QoL. Close proximity to the psychiatric service—⇑ overall QoL. Receiving support from family in caregiving—⇑ physical and psychological QoL. | n.s. | Depression, anxiety, and stress levels—⇓ QoL. ⇑ caregiving burden—⇓ QoL. |
(Yerriah et al., 2022) | South Africa Cross-sectional n = 101, 53.1 (14.2), 82.2% Outpatients and inpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL (in the physical and social domains). ⇑ education levels—⇑ QoL (in the physical and social domains). Being married—⇑ QoL in the social domain score. ⇑ income—⇑ QoL in the physical, social, and environmental domains. | Patient with comorbidity—⇓ QoL physical domain. | ⇑ caregiving burden—⇓ QoL (in all domains). |
(Boyer et al., 2012) | France, Chile Cross-sectional French: n = 245, 60.6, 67.1% Chilean: n = 41, 54.3, 63.4% Outpatients | SF-36 | Mothers—⇓⇓ QoL across all domains. Living with the patient—⇓ QoL mental composite domain. Employed caregivers—⇑ QoL in the physical composite domain. ⇑ age—⇓ QoL in the physical composite domain. | n.s. | n.s. |
(Kate et al., 2013a) | India Cross-sectional n = 100, 46 (12), 35% Outpatients and inpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | No significant correlations were found between sociodemographic factors and caregiver QoL. | n.s. | ⇑ positive caregiving experience—⇑ QoL in all domains. ⇑ scores in spirituality, religiousness, and personal beliefs—⇑ QoL. |
(Li et al., 2007) | China Cross-sectional n = 96, 47 (12), 57.3% Inpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL (physical health and psychological domains). ⇑ household income—⇑⇑ QoL (in the physical and psychological domains). ⇑ education levels—⇑ psychological, social, and environmental QoL. ⇑ caregiver physical health—the strongest predictor of ⇑ QoL. | ⇑ illness duration and more hospitalizations of the patient—⇓ QoL. | n.s. |
(ZamZam et al., 2011) | Malaysia Cross-sectional n = 117, 47 (12), 52.1% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | Parents—⇓ QoL in the physical health domain. Higher education—⇑ QoL. Employed caregivers—⇑ QoL (in the physical and psychological domains). ♀—⇓ QoL in the physical domain. ⇑ caregiver health—⇑ QoL in the physical, psychological, and environmental domains. | ⇑ illness duration and multiple hospitalizations—⇓ QoL. Later illness onset—⇑ social relationships QoL. Caregivers of patients attending day care programs—⇓ QoL across all domains. ⇑ severity of symptoms—⇓ QoL in the physical and environmental domains. Caregivers of employed patients or of patients with higher educational levels—⇑ QoL in the psychological domain. | ⇑ caregiver stress levels—⇓ QoL in the psychological and environmental domains. |
(Vadher et al., 2020) | India Cross-sectional n = 50, 46.7 (14.2), 40% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ♀—⇓ QoL in the environmental domain. | n.s. | ⇑ caregiver burden of care—⇓ QoL in all domains. |
(Usman et al., 2021) | Pakistan Cross-sectional n = 150, 45.36 (3.85) 36.7% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | Caregivers aged 31–60 years—⇑ QoL, compared to those aged < 30 years or > 60 years. Employed caregivers—⇑ QoL (p = 0.040). ⇑ household income—⇑⇑ QoL. Parents—⇑ QoL scores compared to spouse, offspring, sibling, or other. Caregivers with chronic physical illnesses—⇓⇓ QoL. Caregivers of patients aged >30 years—⇑ QoL compared to caregivers of younger patients (p < 0.001). | n.s. | n.s. |
(Hsiao et al., 2020) | China Cross-sectional n = 157, 54.94 (2.22) 63.7% Inpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL (in the physical and psychological domains). ⇓ education—⇓ QoL. ⇓ income—⇓ QoL in all domains. Employed caregivers—⇑ physical, psychological, and social QoL. Parents—⇓ QoL scores. | ⇑ psychiatric symptom severity—⇓ QoL in all domains. | ⇑ mutuality score (better caregiver–patient relationships)—⇑ QoL across all domains. Effective family coping strategies—⇑ QoL across all domains. |
(Winahyu et al., 2015) | Indonesia Cross-sectional n = 137, 47.36 (12.22) 74.45% Outpatients | S-CGQoL | Employed caregivers—⇑ QoL (Beta = 0.15, p = 0.024). Gender, period of being a caregiver, and health status—no significant correlation with QoL. | n.s. | ⇑ caregiver burden of care—⇓ QoL (Beta = −0.39, p < 0.001). ⇑ perceived social support—⇑⇑ QoL (Beta = 0.40, p < 0.001). |
(Peng et al., 2024) | China Longitudinal n = 161, 66.32 (10.52) 49.07% Outpatients | WHOQoL-Bref | ⇑ age—⇓ QoL (in the physical and psychological domains). ⇑ education levels—⇑ QoL (in the psychological domain). ⇑ income—⇑ QoL. | ⇑ psychiatric symptom severity—⇓ QoL in all domains. | ⇑ expressed emotion—⇓⇓ QoL. ⇑ internalized stigma—⇓⇓ QoL |
(Caqueo-Urízar et al., 2016a) | Bolivia, Chile, Peru Cross-sectional n = 253, 54.7 (14.4), 67% Outpatients | S-CGQoL | Being female, older, unemployed, Aymara, and having a low family income—⇓ QoL levels. | n.s. | Greater perception of patient’s neurocognitive and social cognitive deficits—⇓ QoL in family relationships. |
(Ghosh et al., 2020) | India Cross-sectional n = 35, 42.5 (12.1), 37.1% Patients’ setting n.s. | WHOQoL-Bref | n.s. | n.s. | ⇑ caregiver burden of care—⇓ QoL in the psychological domain (p = 0.040) and the environmental domain (p = 0.030). |
Article | Study Design | Question Number | Overall Score | Methodological Quality | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | ||||
(Ribé et al., 2018) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Stanley et al., 2017) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Kate et al., 2014) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | U | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 5 62.5% | moderate |
(Margetić et al., 2013) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | U | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 5 62.5% | moderate |
(Mizuno et al., 2012) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Quah, 2014) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Kate et al., 2013b) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Stanley & Balakrishnan, 2023) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Khatimah et al., 2022) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Tristiana et al., 2019) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Francisquini et al., 2020) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Caqueo-Urízar et al., 2016b) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Caqueo-Urízar et al., 2016a) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Khan & Ghourmulla Alghamdi, 2020) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Geriani, 2015) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Marutani et al., 2020) | cross-sectional | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 7 87.5% | high |
(Ukpong & Ibigbami, 2021) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Wang et al., 2023) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | U | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 5 62.5% | moderate |
(Opoku-Boateng et al., 2017) | cross-sectional | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 7 87.5% | high |
(Yerriah et al., 2022) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Boyer et al., 2012) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Kate et al., 2013a) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | U | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 5 62.5% | moderate |
(Li et al., 2007) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(ZamZam et al., 2011) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Vadher et al., 2020) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Usman et al., 2021) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Hsiao et al., 2020) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Winahyu et al., 2015) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | 8 100% | excellent |
(Peng et al., 2024) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Caqueo-Urízar et al., 2016b) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
(Ghosh et al., 2020) | cross-sectional | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | N | Y | Y | 6 75% | moderate |
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Gagiu, C.; Dionisie, V.; Manea, M.C.; Covaliu, A.; Vlad, A.D.; Tupu, A.E.; Manea, M. Quality of Life in Caregivers of Patients with Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Sociodemographic, Clinical, and Psychological Factors. Behav. Sci. 2025, 15, 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15050684
Gagiu C, Dionisie V, Manea MC, Covaliu A, Vlad AD, Tupu AE, Manea M. Quality of Life in Caregivers of Patients with Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Sociodemographic, Clinical, and Psychological Factors. Behavioral Sciences. 2025; 15(5):684. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15050684
Chicago/Turabian StyleGagiu, Corina, Vlad Dionisie, Mihnea Costin Manea, Anca Covaliu, Ana Diana Vlad, Ancuta Elena Tupu, and Mirela Manea. 2025. "Quality of Life in Caregivers of Patients with Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Sociodemographic, Clinical, and Psychological Factors" Behavioral Sciences 15, no. 5: 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15050684
APA StyleGagiu, C., Dionisie, V., Manea, M. C., Covaliu, A., Vlad, A. D., Tupu, A. E., & Manea, M. (2025). Quality of Life in Caregivers of Patients with Schizophrenia: A Systematic Review of the Impact of Sociodemographic, Clinical, and Psychological Factors. Behavioral Sciences, 15(5), 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15050684